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Out of Africa (1985)
In director Sydney Pollack's Best Picture-winning biographical
romantic epic:
- the lyrically-beautiful scenes on location in Kenya,
Africa (during the opening flashback voice-over narration); the
prologue was delivered by older Danish Baroness and author/writer
Karen Blixen (Meryl Streep), as she slept and then awoke to write
- she reflected back on her love of Africa and local big-game hunter
Denys Finch Hatton (Robert Redford): " He even took the Gramophone
on safari. Three rifles, supplies for a month and Mozart. He began
our friendship with a gift. And later, not long before Tsavo, he
gave me another. An incredible gift. A glimpse of the world through
God's eye. And I thought: 'Yes, I see. This is the way it was intended.'
I've written about all the others, not because I loved them less,
but because they were clearer, easier. He was waiting for me there.
But I've gone ahead of my story. He'd have hated that. Denys loved
to hear a story told well. You see, I had a farm in Africa at the
foot of the Ngong Hills. But it began before that. It really began
in Denmark. (gunshots) And there I knew two brothers. One
was my lover, and one was my friend"
- the scene of the arrival of Danish authoress/wife
Karen Tania Blixen-Finecke (aka pen name Isak Dinesen) at the Nairobi
(British East Africa) plantation home of her womanizing husband Baron
Bror Blixen-Flecke (Klaus Maria Brandauer) - a coffee farm - it was
a marriage of convenience
- the tense scene of a lionness threatening to attack
Karen, while white hunter Denys held a gun and waited for the animal
to walk off peacefully; he cautioned her: "I wouldn't run. If
you do, she'll think you're something good to eat"
- the majestic biplane ride over the wilds of Africa
in which Karen reached back and held hands with Denys during their
affair
- the scene of Hatton shampooing Karen's hair during
a safari (to untangle her hair), while he quoted: "Laughed loud
and long, and all the while his eyes went to and fro. 'Ha ha,' quoth
he, 'Full plain I see. The devil knows how to row.' Farewell, farewell...but
this I tell to thee, thou wedding guest...He prayeth well who loveth
well both man and bird and beast"
- the sequence of the plantation's processing shed-barn
burning to the ground, destroying all the farm equipment and crops
as well and causing great financial hardship; Karen noted: "All
gone...I think God had a hand in it. He gave me my best crop ever,
and then He remembered"
Grasping Hands During Flight
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Plantation Barn Burning
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Shampooing Karen's Hair in the Wild
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- the sad sequence of the funeral of Denys after a
deadly bi-plane crash at Tsavo in Africa, and Karen's attendance
at the outdoor burial/funeral in the Ngong Hills, where she delivered
a memorial reading from A.E. Houseman's "To An Athlete Dying
Young": ("The time you won your town the race, we cheered
you through the market-place. Man and boy stood cheering by, as
home we brought you shoulder-high. Smart lad to slip betimes away,
from fields where glory does not stay, early though the laurel
grows, it withers quicker than a rose. Now you will not swell the
rout of lads that wore their honors out, runners whom renown outran,
and the name died 'fore the man. And round that early-laurelled
head will flock to gaze the strengthless dead, and find unwithered
on its curls, a garland briefer than a girl's. Now take back the
soul of Denys George Finch Hatton, whom you have shared with us.
He brought us joy, and we loved him well. He was not ours. He was
not mine"); she resisted the European custom of throwing a
handful dirt onto the coffin, and slowly walked away from the grave
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- the film concluded with another poetic voice-over
recollection, about her preparations to leave Africa for good: "If
I know a song of Africa, of the giraffe and the African new moon
lying on her back, of the plows in the fields and the sweaty faces
of the coffee pickers, does Africa know a song of me? Will the
air over the plain quiver with a color that I have had on? Or will
the children invent a game in which my name is? Or the full moon
throw a shadow over the gravel of the drive that was like me? Or
will the eagles of the Ngong Hills look out for me?"
- the scene of Baroness Karen's final goodbye at the
train station to her African assistant Farah Aden (Malick Bowens)
when she asked him to say her name: ("I want to hear you say
my name"); he responded: "You are Karen, Msabu")
- and the film's bittersweet final lines - read by Karen
from a letter she received: ("The mail has come today and a
friend writes this to me: 'The Masai have reported to the district
commissioner at Ngong that many times, at sunrise and sunset, they
have seen lions on Finch Hatton's grave. A lion and a lioness have
come there and stood or lain on the grave for a long time. After
you went away, the ground around the grave was leveled out into a
sort of terrace. I suppose that the level place makes a good site
for the lions. From there, they have a view over the plain and the
cattle and game on it'... Denys will like that. I must remember to
tell him")
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Opening Narration
Karen's Initial Arrival at Kenya Plantation
With Husband Baron Bror
Lionness Threatening an Attack on Karen - Saved by Denys
Final Goodbye at the Train Station
Lions on Denys' Gravesite
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